mi-yo’-gla-sin —na-éan’-éan. 
319 
N. 
n, the sixteenth letter of the Dakota 
alphabet. It has the sound of En- 
glish n in name, not, ete., and, except 
in a few cases, occurs only in the 
beginning or middle of a syllable. 
na, a prefix to verbs. It commonly 
indicates that the action is done 
with the foot; butit is also used to 
express the effects of frost, heat, ete. 
na, v. mmperat. only; take it: na wo, 
na po. ZT, used by women and 
children: 7. q. ye. 
na, con. TT. and, moreover, also: 
4. g. ka. 
na, suffix diminutive. Th., i. q. day. 
na, adverbial exclamation. here; na, 
iéu wo, here, take it, said when pass- 
ing the pipe around. T. L. Riggs 
thinks it is not a verb as used by 
Teetons. 
na-a/-Ga-&a, v. to plunge, said 
of fish plunging in water: naagaga 
Skan, it plays plunging about 
na-a-hda-pSsiy, v. of ahdapsin; 
to kick over—naawalhdapsin. 
na-a’-hda-pSiy-yay, v. of ahda- 
psinyay; naahdapsiyyay tyeya, to 
kick anything over. 
na-a’-hmus, cont. of naahmuza. 
na-a’-hmu-za, v.n. todraw up, 
as a person dying—naawahmuza. 
T., natib aya. 
na-a/-ka-mni, v. naakamni | 
iyeya, fo cause to burst or spread 
out, as one’s moccasins. 
lyeya and napota. 
na-a’-ka-§’in, v. 
T., nabla 
to bend back- 
wards: naakas'iy iyaya. T., naka- 
See kag’in. 
na-a’-mda-ya, v. 
sin. 
to make level 
by trampling on—naawamdaya,; to 
become level or plain; to swell out 
full. T., naablaya. 
na-a’-tin-za, v. a. 
hard—naawatinza. 
See amdaya. 
to tread down 
na-bag’, cont. of nabaka; nabag 
iyeya, to kick out the foot. T., na- 
gwag. 
na-bag’-ba-ka, v. red. of na- 
baka. 
to kick out the 
Ik. 
na-ba/-ka, vw. n. 
foot; to struggle—nawabaka. 
nagwaka, 
nab-kay’, n TT. (nape and kay) 
the cords of the wrist. 
na-bla’-ya,v. 7. i. q namdaya. 
na-bw, va. to drum with the foot, 
beat on the ground, stamp—nawabu, 
nawybupi. 
na-buw-bu, v. red. of nabu; to 
make a noise by stamping—nawa- 
bubu. 
Na-Ga’, 7. 
E 
ha and itayéan. 
achief. See mazyu- 
na-Gam See naéapéam. 
na-Gan’-Gan, v. of Géanéan; fo 
make shake with the foot; to shake— 
nawacGanéan. 
’-éGam. 
